PARLIAMENTARY SURVEY OF WIMBLEDON. 323 



which alley, and in the wall that parts the said Upper Garden 

 from the Vineyard Garden, betwixt two fair pillars of brick, there 

 are set fair and large pair of railed gates, of good ornament to 

 both the said gardens. On the South side of the said Maze and 

 Wilderness there is one close or private gravelled walk, inclosed 

 on each side thereof with a very high and well grown hedge of 

 thorn, extending itself from the East wall to the West wall of the 

 said Upper Garden 5 at each end of which close walk there stands Shadow 

 one little shadow or summer house, covered with blue slate and 

 ridged with lead, and fitted for resting places. Which Maze and 

 Wilderness, over and besides the trees thereof, which are herein 

 hereafter valued amongst the other trees of the Upper Garden, and 

 the materials of the said two shadow or summer houses, we 

 value to be worth 90. 



There are in the said Upper Garden one hundred thirty [ Lime 



J trees and 

 one Lime trees and sixty eight elms, of good growths, worth in Elms.] 



the gross at 44. 135. 



There are in the said higher and lower level of the said Upper CyP ress 



trees. 

 Garden one hundred twenty three Cypress trees of divers growths, 



which, though they are not of any great profit, yet, as they are 

 now planted, they exceedingly adorn and set forth the said upper 

 garden, which trees, one with another, we value to be worth in 

 the whole 30. 155. 



There are also in the said higher and lower level an hundred Cherry 

 and nineteen Cherry trees, well planted and ordered, and of a 

 great growth in themselyes, the fruit whereof cannot but be of a 

 great yearly value; which trees we value to be worth ^29. 155. 



There are also in the said higher and lower level one hundred Fruit 

 and fifty fruit trees, of divers kinds of apples and pears, pleasant 

 and profitable; these trees we value to be worth 3J. los. 



There are growing to the walls of the said Upper Garden, fifty Wall 

 three wall fruit trees of divers sorts of fruit, as apricots, may 

 cherries, duke cherries, pear, plums, boone crityans,* french pears, 

 and many other sorts of most rare and choice fruits ; which trees, 

 one with another, in the whole we value at 13. 55. 



In and about the said upper garden there are thirteen Vines, 

 muskadine Vines, well ordered and planted, bearing very sweet 

 grapes, and those in abundance at the season of the year; which 

 we value to be worth 3. 53. 



* = bon chrctiens, pears. 



21 * 



